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7/30/2019 Moto 1823 Trial Brief
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MOTOROLAS TRIAL BRIEFCASE NO. C10-1823-JLR
SUMMIT LAWGROUP PLLC315FIFTHAVENUE SOUTH,SUITE 1000
SEATTLE,WASHINGTON 98104-2682Telephone: (206) 676-7000
Fax: (206) 676-7001
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The Honorable James L. Robart
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURTFOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON
AT SEATTLE
MICROSOFT CORPORATION, a Washingtoncorporation,
Plaintiff,
v.
MOTOROLA, INC., MOTOROLA MOBILITYLLC, and GENERAL INSTRUMENTCORPORATION,
Defendants.
CASE NO. C10-1823-JLR
MOTOROLAS TRIAL BRIEF
[REDACTED]
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MOTOROLAS TRIAL BRIEFCASE NO. C10-1823-JLR
i SUMMIT LAWGROUP PLLC315FIFTHAVENUE SOUTH,SUITE 1000
SEATTLE,WASHINGTON 98104-2682Telephone: (206) 676-7000
Fax: (206) 676-7001
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
I. INTRODUCTION .............................................................................................................. 1II. How to Determine Rates Commensurate With RAND ...................................................... 2
A. Reconstructing Hypothetically the Microsoft and Motorola Negotiation .............. 2B. The Via Licensing Pool and MPEG LA Pool Are Not Comparables and
Reliance on Them Is Not Justified by a MultilateralEx Ante Methodology .......... 5C. Hold Up and Stacking Are Not Proven Problems Here .......................................... 9D. Microsofts New SEP Licensing Paradigm Has Drastic Policy Implications ...... 10
III. Motorolas Patents Make Valuable Contributions to the Standards and toMicrosofts Products ......................................................................................................... 11A. The Parties 802.11 Portfolios .............................................................................. 12
1. Motorolas 802.11 Patents are Directed to Core Features ........................ 122. Microsofts Products Use Motorolas Patents to Satisfy Consumer
Demand ..................................................................................................... 153. Microsofts 802.11 Patents ....................................................................... 16
B.
The Parties H.264 Portfolios ............................................................................... 16
1. Motorolas H.264 Essential Patents are Directed to Core Features .......... 162. Microsofts Products Use Motorolas Patents to Satisfy Consumer
Demand ..................................................................................................... 193. There Were No Comparable Alternatives to Motorolas Patents at
the Time the H.264 Standard Was Adopted ............................................. 214. Microsofts H.264 Patents ........................................................................ 21
IV. Determining a Range of RAND Rates In This Case Based On a HypotheticalBilateral Negotiation ......................................................................................................... 22A. Motorolas Licenses and Licensing Practices ....................................................... 22B. 2.25% Is the Only Logical Starting Point ............................................................. 23
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MOTOROLAS TRIAL BRIEFCASE NO. C10-1823-JLR
ii SUMMIT LAWGROUP PLLC315FIFTHAVENUE SOUTH,SUITE 1000
SEATTLE,WASHINGTON 98104-2682Telephone: (206) 676-7000
Fax: (206) 676-7001
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C. The RAND Rates for the Parties Portfolios......................................................... 24V. CONCLUSION ................................................................................................................. 24
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MOTOROLAS TRIAL BRIEFCASE NO. C10-1823-JLR
i SUMMIT LAWGROUP PLLC315FIFTHAVENUE SOUTH,SUITE 1000
SEATTLE,WASHINGTON 98104-2682Telephone: (206) 676-7000
Fax: (206) 676-7001
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TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
Page(s)
CASES
Lucent Techs., Inc. v. Gateway, Inc.,580 F.3d 1301 (Fed. Cir. 2009)..................................................................................................6
Mondis Tech., Ltd. v. LG Elecs., Inc.,Nos. 2:07CV565TJWCE and 2:08CV478TJW, 2011 WL 2417367 (E.D. Tex.June 14, 2011) ............................................................................................................................5
Riles v. Shell Exploration & Prod. Co.,298 F.3d 1302 (Fed. Cir. 2002)....................................................................................................5
Studiengesellschaft Kohle, m.b.H. v. Dart Indus., Inc.,862 F.2d 1564 (Fed. Cir. 1988)....................................................................................................5
The Boeing Co. v. United States,86 Fed. Cl. 303 (2009) ...............................................................................................................5
Unisplay, S.A. v. Am. Elec. Sign Co.,69 F.3d 512 (Fed. Cir. 1995)................................................................................................5, 11
STATUTES
35 U.S.C. 284 ................................................................................................................................3
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MOTOROLAS TRIAL BRIEF - 1CASE NO. C10-1823-JLR
1 SUMMIT LAWGROUP PLLC315FIFTHAVENUE SOUTH,SUITE 1000
SEATTLE,WASHINGTON 98104-2682Telephone: (206) 676-7000
Fax: (206) 676-7001
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I. INTRODUCTIONThe Court has recognized that it faces difficult issues of first impression: considering what
methodology should be used to determine a RAND royalty rate range, and then using that
methodology to determine a range of RAND rates applicable to Motorolas standard essential
patents (SEPs). (See, e.g., Dkt. No. 490 at 22.) In doing so, to be as true as possible to what
actually happens in the real world, the Court should recreate the licensing negotiation that would
have taken place had Microsoft negotiated with Motorola in October 2010.
In reconstructing that bilateral negotiation, the Court should focus on the importance of
Motorolas patented technology to Microsofts products, recognizing that the products broadly
implement both the 802.11 and H.264 standards. In addition to this technical assessment of the
patents, the Court should also consider the value and importance of Motorola patents as
demonstrated by Motorolas past SEP licenses. These licenses are negotiated market transactions
that reflect how Motorola and a variety of third parties have actually valued Motorolas portfolios
when negotiating at arms length under a RAND commitment. This is the best measure of value
of Motorolas patents. Indeed, these negotiated rates reflect the balance, which Microsoft itself
has recognized, between (1) the right of SEP holders not just to recoup their substantial investment
in R&D, but to receive fair value for their patents; and (2) the right of implementers to obtain
reasonable (but not de minimis) rates because they are locked into complying with the standard.
In contrast, Microsofts patent pool approach disrupts this delicate balance by mandating
depressed royalty rates that heavily favor implementers. If a SEP holder is forced to license
patents only at pool rates it does not believe will provide fair value, it will be unlikely to
contribute its valuable patents to the standard. Companies such as Motorola invest billions of
dollars in R&D to develop the best technology. It makes little business sense to contribute such
valuable technology to a standard if the only return will be pennies on a dollar. The result of
Microsofts approach, apart from imposing a penalty on Motorola that was never envisioned by
either Motorola or the standard setting organizations (SSOs) with which Motorola actually
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MOTOROLAS TRIAL BRIEF - 3CASE NO. C10-1823-JLR
3 SUMMIT LAWGROUP PLLC315FIFTHAVENUE SOUTH,SUITE 1000
SEATTLE,WASHINGTON 98104-2682Telephone: (206) 676-7000
Fax: (206) 676-7001
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evaluate the scope, use, and importance of patents in each partys portfolios, to arrive at a final
RAND rate for that license. Mr. Dailey will testify that the foregoing is what Motorola has done
and continues to do in patent license negotiations. Indeed, as Judge Crabb recently observed:
[T]here are all these things that enter into [a SEP license] such as the value ofeach parties portfolio and cross-licensing. I mean those are just the majorquestions. Then you get into anybody thats negotiating a license has a multitudeof things to consider: How often the payments are made; what currency thepayments are made in; whats the geographical scope; what things are excluded. .. . All of those things are just if you thought about it, they would take weeks andweeks and weeks to think about. . . . I mean this is what people these are thekinds of contracts that people negotiate who are experienced, who spent years inthe business, who have backgrounds in finance and economics.
(Nov. 1, 2012 Hrg Tr., Case No. 11-CV-178-BBC (W.D. Wis.), at 8-9.)1
Motorola has identified 58 licenses that include at least one of the SEPs at issue. All of
these licenses provide at least some indicia of the appropriate initial royalty rate in this case.
(Dkt. No. 490 at 14.) More than that, these licenses provide evidence regarding Motorolas
licensing practices.
These real-world licenses are arms-length market transactions that reflect the value of
Motorolas patents and are the best evidence for modeling the hypothetical negotiation here.
Motorola appreciates the Courts concern regarding whether it should apply the Entire
Market Value Rule (EMVR), which is used in a reasonable royalty damages analysis under 35
U.S.C. 284, to the hypothetical RAND licensing negotiation context. But if the Court wishes to
recreate the actual real-world negotiation between the parties, the EMVR should not be a constraint
in that analysis.2
1 The transcript of this hearing in Apple, Inc. v. Motorola Mobility, Inc., was provided to the Court by separateletter. All emphasis is added unless otherwise indicated.
2 This Rule springs from the Federal Circuits 35 U.S.C. 284 damages jurisprudence, and there is no reason whyit should be applied in the RAND licensing context, which takes place between private parties on a bilateral contractbasis.
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MOTOROLAS TRIAL BRIEF - 4CASE NO. C10-1823-JLR
4 SUMMIT LAWGROUP PLLC315FIFTHAVENUE SOUTH,SUITE 1000
SEATTLE,WASHINGTON 98104-2682Telephone: (206) 676-7000
Fax: (206) 676-7001
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Indeed, Mr. Donohoe will testify that royalty rates in real-world SEP patent licenses are
commonly stated as a percentage of sales or final product price. See, e.g., Ex. 2863 at 20.05.3
He
will explain that there are several reasons for this, including ease of accounting and efficiency, and
because the royalty will adjust automatically as the price adjusts. Even the current IEEE LOA form
expressly permits royalties to be based on a final product price. See, e.g., Ex. 214.
Both Motorolas and Microsofts own licenses confirm this real-world licensing practice.
And several of Microsofts interoperability protocol
patent licenses, which purport to license on reasonable and non-discriminatory terms, include a
royalty based on the product sold by the licensee. See, e.g.,Exs. 3043-3046.
There are additional reasons the EMVR is an inappropriate constraint in a private licensing
context. Because parties to SEP licenses typically seek broad coverage and protection, SEP
licenses almost always cover future unknown products that cannot be accounted for in an EMVR
analysis. This case is a real-world example demonstrating why this is the case. For example, in
October 2010, Microsofts Xbox was the only Microsoft Wi-Fi product with significant sales. But
on October 26 of this year, Microsoft introduced its Surface Tablet a product that Microsoft has
been heavily advertising4
that relies entirely on Wi-Fi to connect to the internet. And Microsoft
apparently is working on its own smartphone, which undoubtedly will have Wi-Fi capabilities.5
The EMVR is a damages analysis applied to specific products after infringement has been
found. It is inappropriate to apply this damages constraint in a licensing context that deals with
future, unknown products, which may use the standardized technology in new and unanticipated
ways. That is why the EMVR is not applied in real-world bilateral licensing. Similarly, SEP
3 Ex. __ refers to the identified proposed trial exhibit number. A courtesy copy of each cited exhibit will beprovided to the Court in electronic and paper form by the parties on Thursday, November 8, 2012.
4 As just one example, the home page at www.microsoft.com now features the Surface tablet.5See http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2012/11/02/why-microsoft-might-want-to-build-its-own-smartphone/.
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licenses are almost always worldwide in scope; applying the EMVR in this context would have the
effect of imposing a U.S. litigation constraint to arms-length licensing around the world.
Even if the Court believes the EMVR might have some applicability to licensing, whether
the EMVR applies here should be informed by Motorolas past licensing practices. See, e.g.,
Riles v. Shell Exploration & Prod. Co., 298 F.3d 1302, 1313 (Fed. Cir. 2002) (finding experts
damages models improperly ignored [patent holders] established licensing practice when
considering appropriate royalty rate); Unisplay, S.A. v. Am. Elec. Sign Co.,Inc.,69 F.3d 512, 519
(Fed. Cir. 1995); Studiengesellschaft Kohle, m.b.H. v. Dart Indus., Inc.,862 F.2d 1564, 1568 (Fed.
Cir. 1988) ([T]he patentees usual licensing approach should be considered in assessing a reasonable
royalty.).
The industry practice endorsed by SSOs of using net selling price of the end product,
along with Motorolas history of doing so, necessarily informs what the royalty base would be in
this negotiation, because that base is predicated on the royalty base in prior real-world negotiation
involving the parties. See, e.g., The Boeing Co. v. United States, 86 Fed. Cl. 303, 319-20 (2009);
Mondis Tech., Ltd. v. LG Elecs., Inc., Nos. 2:07CV565TJWCE and 2:08CV478TJW,
2011 WL 2417367, at *3 (E.D. Tex. June 14, 2011).
B. The Via Licensing Pool and MPEG LA Pool Are Not Comparables andReliance on Them Is Not Justified by a MultilateralEx Ante Methodology
The nub of Microsofts case is that the Court should adopt the rates of the Via Licensing
pool for 802.11 and the MPEG LA pool for H.264. But patent pools are voluntary organizations
and, unlike with the IEEE and ITU, Motorola has no contractual obligation to these pools.
Motorola has not joined these pools. As Mr. Dailey will explain, Motorola invests nearly $1.5
billion annually in R&D. Motorola like other high-technology companies is entitled to recover
a fair return on this investment through patent licensing, if it chooses. Certain companies will not
join pools as licensors because low pool royalty rates do not permit a fair return on R&D
investment.
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As a plaintiff relying on these pools, Microsoft necessarily bears the burden of showing
that they are comparable to the real-world negotiation between Microsoft and Motorola.6 See,
e.g., Lucent Techs., Inc. v. Gateway, Inc., 580 F.3d 1301, 1329 (Fed. Cir. 2009). Microsoft,
however, cannot meet this burden. As the Court recognized during theDauberthearing (Oct. 18,
2012 Hrg Tr. at 39) and as Mr. Roger Smith, Motorolas patent pool expert, will explain, patent
pools are fundamentally different from, and typically have much lower rates than, private arms-
length negotiated licenses. There are many reasons for this, including: (1) the principal objective
of these pools is to minimize royalty exposure and maximize freedom of operation for licensees;
(2) pools that allocate revenue based on patent-counting ignore the value of the patents, which
deters holders of high-value SEPs from joining as licensors; (3) due to the non-negotiable nature
of pool patent licenses, royalty rates must be low to entice licensees to join; (4) pools have low
licensing transaction costs that allow for lower rates; and (5) concerns over antitrust scrutiny deter
higher rates. Generally, as recognized by Microsofts expert, Dr. Lynde, the higher the value of an
owners SEPs and the stronger its licensing program, the lower the incentive to join a pool. Lynde
Depo. Tr. at 182:20-183:3. Indeed, such an owner will see a greater return on its investment by
negotiating licenses with potential licensees. For example, of the top eight firms holding SEPs for
H.264, three (Nokia, Motorola, and IBM) declined to join MPEG LAs H.264 pool.
As the Court recognized, [t]he motivation of someone joining the pool and setting a pool
rate is not the same as Motorolas motivation, which is to maximize its return. (Oct. 18, 2012
Hrg Tr. at 40.) Indeed, Microsoft did not join the MPEG LA pool to generate a licensing revenue
stream from its H.264 SEPs. Dean Hachamovitch, Microsofts Vice President in Charge of
Internet Explorer, explained in a blog that revenue plays no part in our decision to join the
MPEG LA pool. Ex. 2840. Rather, Microsoft sought to maximize its return by selling as many
6 Microsofts reliance on patent pools also belies its assertions about the EMVR. The two pools relied on byMicrosoft as comparables include a fixed per unit rate, regardless of the products price or whether the 802.11 orH.264 functionality is the basis for customer demand.
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H.264 products as possible that were clear of infringement claims.
Compelling evidence of the inappropriateness of using patent pools as comparables comes
from an email sent by Gary Sullivan, the Microsoft employee who served as chairman of the
committee that developed the H.264/AVC standard. Ex. 2345.
Ignoring the general differences between pools and bilateral licenses and the fact that
Motorola has not joined these pools, Microsofts experts have concocted a multilateral ex ante
approach to justify reliance on pool rates. But neither the Via Licensing nor MPEG LA pool is
multilateral or ex ante and indeed Microsoft has not pointed to any real-world negotiation
that was both multilateral and ex ante within its own definitions. Dr. Lynde defines a
multilateral negotiation as requiring full participation of all patent holders and prospective
licensees. Neither Via Licensing nor MPEG LA was negotiated with full participation. While
the 802.11 standard has (in Dr. Lyndes words) in the hundreds or thousands of SEPs and SEP
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holders, the pool itself has only five licensors. As for MPEG LA, it appears that fewer than two
dozen7
companies (out of over 1,100 licensees and licensors) were involved in establishing the
terms of the agreement. In recognition of this, during the October 18 oral argument, Microsofts
counsel conceded that MPEG LA is not fully multilateral, and that the Via Licensing pool is
not as strong a comparable as the MPEG LA pool. (Oct. 18, 2012 Hrg Tr. at 44.)
Microsoft would also require that RAND terms be set ex ante i.e., before the 802.11 and
H.264 standards were adopted or widely implemented. But Microsoft has not demonstrated that
either of these pools is the result of an ex ante process. In the case of Via Licensing, that pool
agreement was established in 2005, nearly seven years after the original 802.11 standard was
adopted in 1997. And in the case of MPEG LA, the H.264 standard was adopted in May 2003 and
the terms for the MPEG LA H.264 pool were agreed upon six months later in November 2003.
Microsofts reliance on pools also contradicts the economic theory it has advanced
throughout this litigation that the value of a SEP should be the incremental value of that SEP over
available alternatives. Patent pools do not value patents in this way. Indeed, the two pools
Microsoft proposes as comparables do the opposite these pools treat all patents (both weak and
strong) as if they are equally valuable (or equally unimportant) and distribute royalties on an equal,
per-patent basis. This patent counting approach ignores the technology of the patent, its
importance, its contribution to the standard, and its use. This not only deters high-value SEP
holders from joining these pools, but also means that the pool rates reveal nothing about the
incremental value of any particular patent or portfolio in the pool. And such patent counting
directly contradicts what Microsofts own Gary Sullivan said
Ex. 2345. Indeed, Judge Crabb expressed
7See http://www.mpegla.com/Lists/MPEG%20LA%20News%20List/Attachments/138/n_03-09-11_avc.html.
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skepticism that this was an appropriate way to proceed when Apple suggested that she adopt a
similar patent-counting method. (Nov. 5, 2012 Tr., Case No. 11-CV-178-BBC (W.D. Wis.), at 28.)
C. Hold Up and Stacking Are Not Proven Problems HereCritically, Microsofts theoretical multilateral ex ante approach is not necessary to
address hold up and stacking. For example, as Microsoft conceded in its proposed findings of fact,
[a]dopting a multilateral perspective means considering the aggregate royalty burden potentially
imposed by all SEP holders; it does not require or imply that the actual negotiation of RAND
license agreements should necessarily be conducted multilaterally. Rather, it provides a larger
contextual framework for private parties to use in evaluating proposed RAND terms in bilateral
negotiations or for a court to consider in evaluating proposed RAND terms in the event of a
dispute. (Dkt. No. 454 89.) As the Court observed, [e]very possibility exists that Microsofts
stacking concern could be addressed through a bilateral negotiation. (Dkt. No. 490 at 26.)
Microsofts experts admit they have no specific evidence that any of Motorolas
successfully-negotiated SEP licenses has led to a stacking problem. Indeed, given that Microsoft
has taken just one 802.11 license and one H.264 license, it demonstrably does nothave a stacking
problem. And Microsoft ignores that while stacking is a theoretical risk, Microsoft has not
presented any credible evidence that it is a real-world problem for 802.11 or H.264. This is
because (1) many SEP holders do not license their patents, electing instead to save their patents for
defensive purposes and (2) most SEP licenses are cross-licenses that yield lower net rates.
Regarding hold up, Microsofts experts again admit that they have no specific evidence
that Motorola has held up licensees. Microsoft also ignores that nearly all of Motorolas licenses
are cross-licenses. In a cross licensing situation, there is minimal risk of hold up because both
parties have portfolios to be licensed, subject to their RAND commitments. If Motorola sought
hold up, its licensee would most certainly either complain or seek hold up as well. And given
Microsofts failure to identify any evidence of hold up, it is not surprising that, as the Court will
hear, Microsofts experts admit RAND terms can be reached through private bilateral negotiation.
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D. Microsofts New SEP Licensing Paradigm Has Drastic Policy ImplicationsMicrosofts multilateral ex ante lens or perspective flies in the face of industry and
SSO practice and is inconsistent with Microsofts own public statements to the government even
after this case was filed. On June 14, 2011, David Heiner, Microsofts Vice President and Deputy
General Counsel, and Amy Marasco, Microsofts General Manager, Standards Strategy and
Policy, sent a joint letter on behalf of Microsoft to the Federal Trade Commission, in which they
laid out a very different understanding of RAND than Microsoft now propounds to this Court. See
Ex. 2970. The reasonable positions in that letter highlight the policy implications of the Court
adopting or endorsing Microsofts academic and unrealistic litigation paradigm.
As Microsoft stated in its FTC letter, the RAND commitment balances rights:
Through balanced IPR policies that help make innovative technology available toimplementers on reasonable terms, and that do not undercut the value of patentedtechnology or overly burden patent holders, standards can help to catalyzeinnovation by encouraging companies to contribute their innovative technology tocollaborative standards-setting activities and to share their intellectual property withothers via the standardization process. Standards will not fulfill their salutarypurposes if standards policies deter innovators from contributing patented
technologies or investing in further innovation related to standardized technology.
Id. By advocating a depressed patent pool rate in the guise of a multilateral ex ante
perspective, Microsoft disrupts this balance by substantially favoring licensees at the expense of
patent holders. As Microsoft itself recognized, this reduces the chance that SEP holders will
contribute to a new standard in the future. Ironically, while Microsoft maintains that its paradigm
enables the ready adoption of strong standards, this paradigm would actually result in weaker
standards, because patent holders who invest billions of dollars in R&D will withhold their crown
jewel patents if they believe they will be forced to license their patents for pennies.
Microsofts paradigm also would lead to unsettling results. If Microsoft were correct that
RAND rates should be assessed through a multilateral ex ante lens and should approximate pool
rates, nearly all existingSEP licenses would potentially be viewed as non-compliant with RAND.
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This would open the floodgates of litigation, and courts would be inundated with lawsuits by
licensees trying to use the judicial system to re-negotiate their licenses. Such a result in no way
comports with Microsofts acknowledgement that RAND licenses are typically negotiated
bilaterally after the standard is adopted or with Microsofts FTC statement that [p]roposals to
somehow reduce RAND to some uniform formula could undermine the value of current
practices and restrict some of the flexibility that helps to enable current licensing practices and
protect the defensive value of contributed patent technology. Id.
III. MOTOROLAS PATENTS MAKE VALUABLE CONTRIBUTIONSTO THE STANDARDS AND TO MICROSOFTS PRODUCTS
At trial, Motorola will offer evidence regarding (1) the nature, strength and importance of
Motorolas essential patents to the 802.11 and H.264 Standards and Microsofts products and
(2) the rates of Motorolas previous SEP licenses, negotiated successfully under RAND
commitments. See, e.g., Unisplay,69 F.3d at 519 (The patentees prior license agreements should
carry considerable weight in calculating a reasonable royalty rate.); Chisum on Patents, Vol. VII,
20.07[2][a], p. 20-1243 (The theory underlying giving weight to [actual prior and existing]
licenses is that the actual results reached by persons with conflicting economic interests constitutedirect and reliable evidence of the fair market value of a license under the patent (i.e., the sum that
a willing buyer and willing seller would have agreed to in hypothetical negotiations prior to
commencement of infringement by the defendant).).
In particular, Mr. Donohoe will testify that in arriving at final royalty numbers he
employed the kind of modified Georgia-Pacific approach recommended by Professor
Schmalensee to emulate a hypothetical bilateral negotiation between the parties. He will testify
that, in conducting his analysis, he considered information regarding Motorolas extensive
licensing history for SEPs and numerous SEP licenses, information about the strength and scope
of the parties 802.11 and H.264 portfolios as provided by Motorola technical experts Dr. Timothy
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Williams and Dr. Timothy Drabik respectively, as well as information provided by Motorola
expert Michael Dansky regarding the value of the parties 802.11 and H.264 portfolios and the
importance of the standards and the parties patents to the parties respective product lines.
A. The Parties 802.11 PortfoliosThe 802.11 Standard is a wireless communications standard colloquially known as Wi-
Fi, and is the most widely used and universally accepted wireless communications standard for
ordinary consumer and business use. In recent years, there has been a steadily predominant trend
to provide 802.11-compatible Wi-Fi in personal computers, laptops, video game consoles, cellular
telephones, smartphones, and many other consumer and business products.
The IEEE 802.11 working group issued its first Standard in 1997. Subsequently, the
802.11 working group issued various amendments to the original Standard including amendments
for different communications protocols (802.11a, (b) (g)), improved security (802.11i), quality of
service (QoS) (802.11e), and higher throughput (802.11n). Periodically, the various 802.11
amendments were consolidated into a single document of particular relevance here is IEEE
802.11-2007 (in 2007) (Ex. 427), and IEEE 802.11-2012 (in 2012) (Ex. 386A).
Each communication protocol is capable of certain data rates. In 1999, the 802.11a and
802.11b protocols were approved. 802.11a devices can communicate at data rates up to 54
megabits/sec. 802.11b is slower (11 megabits/sec), but has a greater range than 802.11a. In 2003,
the 802.11g protocol was approved, which had the range of 802.11b and the data rate of
802.11a. In 2009, the 802.11n protocol was approved. It specifies new technology including
the use of multiple antennas and data streams, to increase the data rate to 600 megabits/sec.
1. Motorolas 802.11 Patents are Directed to Core FeaturesAs of October 2010, when Motorolas offer was made and the negotiation would have
taken place, there were at least 23 patent families in Motorolas 802.11 portfolio. Those patent
families include at least 48 Motorola U.S. patents, and in addition many foreign counterparts to
those patents. A summary list of Motorolas 802.11 SEPs is marked as Exhibit 3320. As
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Motorolas expert Dr. Tim Williams will testify, Motorolas essential patents8
are predominantly
directed to important core aspects of the Standard that are necessarily and widely used by devices
that are compliant with the 802.11 Standard. The 23 Motorola 802.11 patent families can be
grouped into 9 general categories: (A) network setup; (B) channel access management; (C) data
modulation techniques; (D) security and encryption; (E) power management; (F) low density
parity check codes; (G) data fragmentation; (H) fast transitions; and (I) mesh networking. Some
of these groups are discussed in more detail below.
Of the 23 Motorola families of 802.11 essential patents, at least 11 families claim subject
matter that is used in Microsofts Xbox products, based on the fact that Microsoft states that its
Xbox products are certified by the Wi-Fi Alliance to comply with the 802.11 Standard. In
addition, a hypothetical negotiation would need to account for the likely use of Motorola 802.11
SEPs in future products (e.g., Microsofts recently released Surface tablet product). Exs. 3379-80.
Significantly, there are no acceptable alternative approaches to the 802.11 technologies
covered by the Motorola essential patents that have been shown to have been actually considered
for implementation by the 802.11 IEEE Standards Organization. Nor has it been shown how any
purported alternative would or could have been implemented in the Standard and, if implemented,
how the Standard would have been amended or rewritten, and what technological or commercial
advantages or disadvantages would have resulted. Inadequacies of the approaches that Microsoft
argues as alternatives to Motorolas 802.11 patents are summarized in Ex. 3317.
Some examples of Motorola's essential patent coverage of core 802.11 technologies:
(A) and (B) Network Setup and Channel Access Management: For the wireless 802.11
Standard, communication connections must be established over the airwaves before any further
communication can occur. This is done by a predetermined exchange of control information
8 A patent claim is essential to the 802.11 Standard if it is necessary to create a compliant implementation of eithermandatory or optional portions of the normative clauses of the [Proposed] IEEE Standard when, at the time of the[Proposed] IEEE Standards approval, there was no commercially and technically feasible non-infringing alternative.Ex. 5 at 14. Motorola expert Dr. Williams compared a representative claim from the parent patent of each of the 23
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between a wireless station (e.g., a computer, smartphone or an Xbox console) and an access
point (e.g., a Wi-Fi router connected to Comcast cable or a Verizon phone line). If this exchange
proceeds correctly, a wireless connection is established between the wireless station and access
point. Because the access point is connected to the Internet, the wireless stations can
communicate, via the router, over the Internet. If more than one station has established a
connection to an access point, the nature of Wi-Fi communication is such that only one station can
communicate at any one point in time. The 802.11 Standard provides for various channel access
management techniques to enable multiple devices to efficiently share the channel.
Motorolas essential patent portfolio includes four families that cover key aspects of
network setup and channel access management: U.S. Patent Nos. 6,069,896 (Borgstahl);
6,331,972 (Harris); 5,142,533 (Crisler); and 6,404,772 (Beach).
(C) Data Modulation Techniques: Once a communication connection between a station
and an access point is established, data can be communicated back and forth between the devices.
In the 802.11 Standard, depending on whether the devices are using the 802.11a, 802.11b, 802.11g
or 802.11n versions, various modulation techniques are specified by the Standard. Generally,
modulation refers to the manner in which the basic carrier wave of the wireless transmission
is varied over time in order to encode the data that is being transmitted. For example, AM radio
uses amplitude modulation, where the amplitude of the carrier wave is varied to transmit voice,
music and other information. The modulation techniques specified by the 802.11 standard are
considerably more sophisticated. Motorolas six standards-essential data modulation patent
families are directed to important aspects of these modulation techniques. Those families are:
U.S. Patent Nos. 6,473,449 (Cafarella); 5,329,547 (Ling); 5,822,359 (Bruckert); 5,519,730
(Jasper); 5,272,724 (Solomon); and 6,038,263 (Kotzin).
(D) Security and Encryption: Any commercially practical implementation of the 802.11
Motorola 802.11 essential patent families to the 802.11 Standard to verify essentiality under the IEEEs definition.The claim charts reflecting this analysis are marked as Exs. 3293-3316.
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Standard must provide security for the communication in order to prevent eavesdropping and
ensure authentic communication. Motorola has four patent families that are essential to the
security provisions of the 802.11 Standard: U.S. Patent Nos. 5,357,571 (Banwart); 5,467,398
(Pierce); 5,689,563 (Brown); and 5,412,722 (Sherly).
(E) Power Management: Power management is important when wireless capability is
provided in portable, battery-powered devices. Motorola patents that are essential to this key
aspect of the Standard are U.S. Patent Nos. 5,029,183 (Tymes) and 5,479,441 (Kramer) (members
of the same family); 5,560,021 (Vook); and 6,236,674 (Morelli).
(F) Low Density Parity Check Codes (LDPC): Motorola has three families relating to
LDPC U.S. Patent Nos. 7,143,333 (Blankenship); 7,165,205 (Blankenship); and 7,493,548
(Nimbalker). These patents are effective for correcting communication errors caused by noise or
poor transmission conditions, and are expected to be important for future Wi-Fi applications.
(G), (H), and (I): The remaining Motorola patent families U.S. Patent Nos. 5,311,516
(Kuznicki) (Data Fragmentation); 7,236,477 (Emeott) (Fast Transitions); and 7,197,016 (Belcea)
(Mesh Networking) are more peripheral to the 802.11 Standard, and would have less
significance in a hypothetical negotiation, but nonetheless should be accorded reasonable value.
2. Microsofts Products Use Motorolas Patents to Satisfy ConsumerDemand
Based on the fact that Microsoft states that its Xbox products comply with the 802.11
Standard and bear the Wi-Fi logo (e.g., Exs. 562, 2040, 2236, 2329), those products use at least
the following 11 Motorola 802.11 essential U.S. patents: 6,069,896 (Borgstahl); 6,331,972
(Harris);6,473,449 (Cafarella); 5,329,547 (Ling); 5,822,359 (Bruckert); 5,519,730 (Jasper);
5,272,724 (Solomon); 5,142,533 (Crisler); 5,357,571 (Banwart); 5,467,398 (Pierce); and
5,689,563 (Brown). Consumer demand for the Xbox is in part driven by the portions of the
802.11 Standard (e.g., network setup and channel access) on which Motorolas patents read.9
9 For example, until the Xbox included 802.11 capability, Xbox 360 sales were generally stagnant from 2007-2009.Microsofts witness Albert Penello confirmed that it would be difficult to sell an Xbox console if it did not have the
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The Xbox is the smallest saleable unit sold by Microsoft that provides complete 802.11
functionality. The Xbox uses an integrated circuit chip that provides some,but not all, of the Wi-
Fi capabilities of the Xbox. According to internal Microsoft documents, the Xbox itself, not the
Wi-Fi chip, is used to perform at least some 802.11 functionality. Exs. 2029-2030. Moreover,
without other circuitry and software provided by Xbox, the Wi-Fi chip, by itself, cannot
communicate or otherwise function with even those aspects of the 802.11 Standard that are
implemented in circuitry within the chip. For example, the Xbox implements the 802.11
Standards highest level of security in order to be certified compliant by the Wi-Fi Alliance, and
Motorolas Banwart patent includes claim limitations that read on security functions carried out in
the processor and memory of the Xbox, not in the Wi-Fi chip.
Microsofts new Surface tablet will use only 802.11, instead of cellular or wired
connections, to connect to the internet. Exs. 3379-3380. Without 802.11 capability, the Surface
tablet would be unable to compete in the market, because consumers can readily select tablet
devices other than the Surface that have 802.11 capability.
3. Microsofts 802.11 PatentsMicrosoft owns 6 families of patents that it has claimed are essential to the 802.11
Standard. At least four of the Microsoft patent families, however, are in fact not essential.
Moreover, the two remaining patent families that arguably are essential relate to aspects of the
Standard that are peripheral to the normal use of the Standard, and relate to 802.11 technology that
has not been widely adopted in actual commercial use. Neither of these two arguably essential
Microsoft patents is used in any Motorola 802.11-compliant product.
B. The Parties H.264 Portfolios1. Motorolas H.264 Essential Patents are Directed to Core Features
Motorola has 16 U.S. patents, and many foreign counterparts, that are essential as
ability to connect wirelessly to the internet. Ex. 2817. With embedded 802.11 capability, such sales are nowprojected to reach nearly $30 billion by 2017. Ex. 2467.
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defined by ITU/ISO/IEC to the practice of the H.264 Standard.10
These 16 essential patents fall
within 6 families, all directed to core aspects of the H.264 Standard.
U.S. Patent No. 5,235,419 (The Krause Family). The Krause Family is directed to
compressing effectively certain types of video data. The data is first compressed using different
block sizes. The encoder then transmits the compressed block data and a code word for the block
size that results in the most compression. The Krause Family also describes a decoder that
receives the compressed block data and the code word, and uses the code word to recover a motion
vector. Having the motion vector, the block data can then be decompressed. The adaptive
compression technology claimed in the Krause Family is important to the H.264 Standard because
it is directed to a fundamental prediction technique that improves coding efficiency. The Krause
Family is essential to the H.264 Standard at every Level of the Baseline, Main, and High Profiles.
U.S. Patent No. 5,376,968 (The Wu Family). The Wu Family is also directed to
compressing video data effectively. Here, blocks of a superblock (i.e. macroblock) are
compressed using different compression modes. An encoder selects the most efficient mode for
compressing the blocks, and then transmits the compressed macroblock and data indicating which
compression mode was used. The Wu Family further describes a decoder that performs the
reverse process. Like the Krause Family, the technology claimed in the Wu Family is important to
the H.264 Standard because it is fundamental to prediction, the core feature of H.264 that is
responsible for much of H.264s coding gain. The Wu Family is essential to the H.264 Standard
at every Level of the Baseline, Main, and High Profiles.
U.S. Patent No. 6,005,980 (The Eifrig Family). The Eifrig Family is directed to
compressing efficiently video data that includes a field coded block. A prediction motion vector
(PMV) is derived for a block based on the motion vectors of a particular set of three neighboring
blocks. The technology claimed in the Eifrig Family is important to the H.264 Standard because it
10 Motorola has one additional U.S. Patent 6,836,514 directed to error correction, an optional feature provided inAnnex B3 of the H.264 Standard.
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provides a more efficient motion compensation technique. Specifically, it provides greater coding
gain by using the three neighboring blocks left, top, and top-right to calculate the PMV. The
Eifrig Family is essential to the H.264 Standard at the Main and High Profiles, Levels 2.1 to 4.1.
U.S. Patent Nos. 6,980,596, 7,310,374, 7,310,375, 7,310,376, 7,310,377, 7,421,025,
7,477,690, 7,817,718 (collectively, The MBAFF Family). The MBAFF Family is directed to
adaptive frame/field (AFF) coding on a group of neighboring macroblocks, e.g., a pair of
macroblocks. Coding macroblocks in pairs is referred to as macroblock adaptive frame/field
(MBAFF) coding in the H.264 Standard. As disclosed in the 596 patent, it is preferable in
some applications to be able to divide macroblocks coded in field mode into the same 7 block
sizes as macroblocks coded in frame mode (1616 pixels, 168 pixels, 816 pixels, 88 pixels,
84 pixels, 48 pixels, and 44 pixels). This can be achieved by performing AFF coding on
macroblock pairs instead of on single macroblocks.
MBAFF is an innovative feature of H.264, which greatly enhanced coding efficiency.
Motorolas MBAFF invention was adopted after experts from Sony and VideoTele confirmed
Motorolas findings that MBAFF outperformed available alternatives by up to 18%. Sony stated that:
We regard this feature [MBAFF] important for developing SDTV/HDTV applications with JVT
[Joint Video Team] coding technology. Ex. 2274 at 1. Similarly VideoTele reported that: Our
simulation results support that macroblock-level frame/field adaptive coding is a useful technique . . .
giving a bit rate savings of 11% to 18% on the two sequences tested. Ex. 2227 at 4. The MBAFF
Family is essential to the H.264 Standard at the Main and High Profiles, Levels 2.1 to 4.1.
U.S. Patent Nos. 7,769,087, 7,660,353, and 7,839,931 (collectively, The PAFF Family).
The PAFF Family is directed to improving a coding technique called PAFF, which involves
deciding, on a picture-by-picture basis, whether to code a picture in a frame mode or in a field
mode (as opposed to making such decisions separately for each pair of macroblocks in a picture
(MBAFF)). The PAFF Family improved the efficiency of applying PAFF to bi-predicted
pictures, which are pictures having two motion vectors, and provide for greater reduction in bit
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rates through flexibility not found in prior PAFF methods. The PAFF Family is essential to the
H.264 Standard at the Main and High Profiles, Levels 2.1 to 4.1.
U.S. Patent Nos. 7,162,094 and 6,987,888 (collectively, The Scan Family). The 094
and 888 patents are directed to scan paths optimized for interlaced video. The 094 patent
discloses a scanning pattern for a 44 pixel blocks frequency coefficient array. The 888 patent
discloses a scanning pattern for an 88 pixel blocks frequency coefficient array. The inventions
disclosed in the Scan Family are important because they improve coding efficiency. Specifically,
the 44 and 88 scan patterns result in significantly more compression than the traditional zigzag
pattern in many applications, including interlaced video coding.
The inventions of Motorolas Scan Family were adopted into the standard after experts
from Samsung and Sony confirmed Motorolas findings that the inventions outperformed
available alternatives. Samsung stated that: The computer simulation carried out using the
current JM2.1 codec with CVLC demonstrated that additional bit rate reduction (BDBR) of up to
8.64% and 6.15% on average is possible. Ex. 2281 at 5. Sony stated that: The simulation
results show that by employing the proposed method coding efficiency gain by up to 3% will be
obtained. Ex. 710 at 2. The 094 patent is essential to the standard at the Main and High
Profiles, Levels 2.1 to 4.1, and the 888 patent is essential at the High Profile, Levels 2.1 to 4.1.11
2. Microsofts Products Use Motorolas Patents to Satisfy ConsumerDemand
Microsoft sells and has sold numerous products that are compliant with the H.264
Standard, including the Xbox, Windows 7, Window 8, Windows Vista, Windows Embedded,
Zune for Windows Expression, Windows Phone 7, and now the new Surface tablet. Each of these
products supports Profiles and Levels covered by Motorolas H.264 patents. As explained above,
11 Microsofts assertions that Motorolas patents are invalid over prior art is flawed, because the alleged prior artidentified by Microsofts expert lacks elements disclosed in the claims of Motorolas patents. Microsofts assertionthat the Krause and Wu patents do not cover software decoders is equally flawed, because one of ordinary skillreading the specifications (including the references to algorithms) would understand that the decoder apparatuscould be implemented in hardware or software. In any event, this is a hypothetical license negotiation, not a patenttrial. The parties will not have resolved individual patent disputes in such a negotiation.
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Motorolas patents span the Baseline, Main and High Profiles, and in particular Profiles and
Levels used for High Definition (HD) video. Because a compliant decoder operating at these
Profiles/Levels must implement all tools for that Profile and Level, Microsofts products use the
technologies claimed in Motorolas H.264 patents. Dr. Drabik confirmed, for example, that the
Xbox, and Windows 7 running on a laptop computer, both play H.264 progressive and interlaced
video, including MBAFF-encoded video. Additionally, Dr. Sukumar confirmed that Xbox users
use their consoles to watch video, including interlaced video and MBAFF-encoded video.12
Microsofts products use Motorolas patented H.264 technologies to satisfy consumer
demand for devices that play a wide range of digital video content. For example, during
development of Windows 7, Microsofts consumer research found that consumers highly valued
HD video playback. Ex. 2377 at 30; DeVaan Depo. Tr. 80:12-25, 82:8-19.
DeVaan
Depo. Tr. at 84:10-11.
Id. at 42:19-22.
Id. at 42:12-14.
Ex. 2373.
Id. at 58:17-19.
Because consumers were installing H.264 codecs, Microsoft decided to support H.264.
Id. at 49:16-23.
12 To the extent it matters, Microsofts Xbox product has been found by an ITC judge to infringe the 596 MBAFFand 094 scan patents (Ex. 428); the Xbox and Windows 7 products have been found to infringe the Germancounterparts to the 419 Krause and Wu 968 patents (Exs. 2206, 2239).
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Ex. 2373; DeVaan Depo. Tr. 59:7-16.
Similarly, Microsoft recognized consumer demand to play video using the Xbox. In 2006,
Microsoft sold an HD DVD accessory to allow customers to play HD video, including H.264
video. Then, in 2007, Microsoft put native H.264 support in the Xbox. Now, Microsoft touts the
Xbox as the all-in-one entertainment center and reports that users are watching 30 hours of
video per month on the Xbox. Ex. 3375.
Without H.264 capability, Microsoft would have difficulty selling its products, because its
products would be unable to play a significant and growing proportion of H.264 video content.
3. There Were No Comparable Alternatives to Motorolas Patents at theTime the H.264 Standard Was Adopted
Motorolas inventions were adopted into the H.264 Standard because they achieved better
coding efficiency than other technologies proposed at the time by experts involved in the JVT,
which included Microsoft. The technologies to which Microsoft now points as allegedly
comparable to Motorolas inventions are, in most cases, technologies that were not recognized as
viable alternatives during development of the H.264 Standard. In the cases in which Microsoft
points to alternative technologies that were considered in connection with H.264, the allegedly
comparable alternative was not shown to provide the efficiency the JVT experts sought to achieve.
For example, Microsoft points to scans submitted by Sony as alleged alternatives to Motorolas
Scan Family. The JVT determined that Sony [n]eed[ed] to demonstrate larger gain for
acceptance. Ex. 2216 at 28. Ultimately, Sony itself and others recommended the adoption of
Motorolas submission. Similarly, the technology alleged by Microsoft as an alternative to
Motorolas MBAFF and PAFF Families applying AFF to single macroblocks was
characterized as need[ing] more work and abandoned. Ex. 3382 at 7.
4. Microsofts H.264 PatentsMicrosofts claim of 40 essential patents is exaggerated because at least 17 are not
essential: 15 are directed to optional features in Annexes B.3, C, D and E of the H.264 Standard
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MOTOROLAS TRIAL BRIEF - 22CASE NO. C10-1823-JLR
22 SUMMIT LAWGROUP PLLC315FIFTHAVENUE SOUTH,SUITE 1000
SEATTLE,WASHINGTON 98104-2682Telephone: (206) 676-7000
Fax: (206) 676-7001
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and at least 2 have narrow claim limitations that do not read on the H.264 Standard. For the
remaining 23 Microsoft patents, there were alternatives available at the time of the adoption of the
H.264 Standard that offered comparable performance. Some of these alternatives were presented
to the JVT and demonstrated to meet or exceed Microsofts patents. For example, alternatives to
Microsofts transform patents were proposed by others and found by the JVT to perform equally
well or better than Microsofts patents. Ex. 2217 at 1; Ex. 2216 at 18.
IV. DETERMINING A RANGE OF RAND RATES IN THIS CASE BASED ON AHYPOTHETICAL BILATERAL NEGOTIATION
Mr. Donohoe will testify, based on his long experience in licensing negotiations, that, in
recreating the hypothetical negotiation between Microsoft and Motorola, he relied on the technical
assessment of Drs. Williams and Drabik described above, as well as on 58 Motorola licenses that
include patents in the H.264 and 802.11 portfolios. Of these 58 licenses, he principally relied
upon seven (notably including running royalty licenses to Option NV in 2004, RIM in 2010, and
VTech in 2011) in determining a range of RAND royalty rates. See, e.g., Exs. 13, 2805, 2833.
A. Motorolas Licenses and Licensing PracticesMotorolas Mr. Dailey will testify regarding Motorolas long and successful history of
engaging in bilateral negotiations that have led to RAND licenses. He will explain that many of
these agreements are for Motorolas cellular portfolios, which include certain patents that are also
found in Motorolas 802.11 portfolio. He will also explain that in recent negotiations, 802.11 and
H.264 technology has become increasingly important to Motorolas competitors.
Mr. Donohoe will testify regarding his view of these agreements, including his reliance on
seven specific licenses that include Motorolas 802.11 and H.264 portfolios in their entireties. He
will testify that several of these licenses,
lead directly to some of his conclusions in this case.
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MOTOROLAS TRIAL BRIEF - 23CASE NO. C10-1823-JLR
23 SUMMIT LAWGROUP PLLC315FIFTHAVENUE SOUTH,SUITE 1000
SEATTLE,WASHINGTON 98104-2682Telephone: (206) 676-7000
Fax: (206) 676-7001
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He will describe licenses entered into by Motorolas subsidiary, Symbol Technologies, which
Exs. 36-39; see also Ex. 2944. Finally, he will explain that
products covered by Motorolas licenses, including VTechs InnoTab 2 and RIMs PlayBook
tablets, utilize Motorolas portfolios in the same way that Microsoft would. See, e.g., Ex. 2801.
Microsoft criticizes Motorola for failing to apportion the royalty between the cellular and
non-cellular portfolios in certain licenses, but this ignores that conducting such an apportionment
would necessarily be arbitrary and contrary to how parties conduct real-world negotiations.
Indeed, the license parties themselves have not apportioned the value of these portfolios in the
agreements.
B. 2.25% Is the Only Logical Starting PointAs Mr. Donohoe will explain, these licenses demonstrate that there was no more logical
starting point for Motorolas opening offer, or for recreating the negotiation between the parties, than
2.25% of net selling price.13
13 In the interest of recreating as closely as possible the actual negotiation that would have taken place betweenMicrosoft and Motorola, it is at least relevant that, in actuality, Motorolas opening offer was 2.25%. Motorolasnumerous other licenses merely confirm that this is Motorolas standard, well-understood negotiating practice.
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MOTOROLAS TRIAL BRIEF - 24CASE NO. C10-1823-JLR
24 SUMMIT LAWGROUP PLLC315FIFTHAVENUE SOUTH,SUITE 1000
SEATTLE,WASHINGTON 98104-2682Telephone: (206) 676-7000
Fax: (206) 676-7001
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In this case, the 2.25% starting point was based on Motorolas standard offer for core SEP
portfolios, the actual opening offers to Microsoft for licenses to the 802.11 and H.264 portfolios,
C. The RAND Rates for the Parties PortfoliosMr. Donohoe will testify that, using the Georgia-Pacific factors as a framework in
emulating a hypothetical bilateral negotiation, and relying on the technical opinions of Dr.
Williams and Dr. Drabik regarding the importance of the parties patents to the respective
standards, and the financial opinions of Mr. Dansky regarding the importance of the standard (and
thus these patents) to the parties products, he determined the following RAND rates:
PortfolioNet Paymentto Motorola
Per Unit Range(Low/High)
Running Royalty Range(Low/High)
V. CONCLUSIONIn determining a RAND range, the Court should construct the hypothetical negotiation that
would have taken place between the parties in October of 2010 had Microsoft engaged in
negotiations at that time. In simulating this negotiation, the Court should disregard Microsofts
attempt to force Motorola into accepting low pool rates from two pools that Motorola has declined
to join and that are neither multilateral nor ex ante by Microsofts own definitions. Instead,
the Court should use the best evidence of what this licensing negotiation would have looked like:
the licenses that Motorola has successfully negotiated for these SEPs.
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MOTOROLAS TRIAL BRIEF - 25CASE NO. C10-1823-JLR
25 SUMMIT LAWGROUP PLLC315FIFTHAVENUE SOUTH,SUITE 1000
SEATTLE,WASHINGTON 98104-2682Telephone: (206) 676-7000
Fax: (206) 676-7001
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DATED this 7th day of November, 2012.
Respectfully submitted,
SUMMIT LAW GROUP PLLC
By/s/ Ralph H. PalumboRalph H. Palumbo, WSBA #04751Philip S. McCune, WSBA #21081Lynn M. Engel, WSBA #21934ralphp@summitlaw.com
philm@summitlaw.com
lynne@summitlaw.com
By/s/ Thomas V. MillerThomas V. MillerMOTOROLA MOBILITY LLC
600 North U.S. Highway 45Libertyville, IL 60048-1286(847) 523-2162
And by
Jesse J. Jenner (pro hac vice )Steven Pepe (pro hac vice )Kevin J. Post (pro hac vice)Ropes & Gray LLP1211 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, NY 10036-8704(212) 596-9046jesse.jenner@ropesgray.comsteven.pepe@ropesgray.comkevin.post@ropesgray.com
James R. Batchelder (pro hac vice)Norman H. Beamer (pro hac vice )Ropes & Gray LLP1900 University Avenue, 6th FloorEast Palo Alto, CA 94303-2284(650) 617-4030james.batchelder@ropesgray.com
norman.beamer@ropesgray.com
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MOTOROLAS TRIAL BRIEF - 26CASE NO. C10-1823-JLR
26 SUMMIT LAWGROUP PLLC315FIFTHAVENUE SOUTH,SUITE 1000
SEATTLE,WASHINGTON 98104-2682Telephone: (206) 676-7000
Fax: (206) 676-7001
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Paul M. Schoenhard (pro hac viceRopes & Gray LLPOne Metro Center700 12th Street NW, Suite 900Washington, DC 20005-3948(202) 508-4693
paul.schoenhard.@ropesgray.com
Attorneys for Motorola Solutions, Inc.,
Motorola Mobility LLC and General
Instrument Corp.
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MOTOROLAS TRIAL BRIEF - 27 27 SUMMIT LAW GROUP PLLC
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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that on this day I electronically filed the foregoing with the Clerk of theCourt using the CM/ECF system which will send notification of such filing to the following:
Arthur W. Harrigan, Jr., Esq.
Christopher T. Wion, Esq.Shane P. Cramer, Esq.
Calfo Harrigan Leyh & Eakes LLParthurh@calfoharrigan.com
chrisw@calfoharrigan.com
shanec@calfoharrigan.com
Richard A. Cederoth, Esq.Brian R. Nester, Esq.David T. Pritikin, Esq.Douglas I. Lewis, Esq.John W. McBride, Esq.
David Greenfield, Esq.William H. Baumgartner, Jr., Esq.David C. Giardina, Esq.Carter G. Phillips, Esq.Constantine L. Trela, Jr., Esq.Ellen S. Robbins, Esq.Nathaniel C. Love, Esq.Sidley Austin LLPrcederoth@sidley.com
bnester@sidley.com
dpritikin@sidley.com
dilewis@sidley.com
jwmcbride@sidley.comdavid.greenfield@sidley.com
wbaumgartner@sidley.com
dgiardina@sidley.com
cphillips@sidley.com
ctrela@sidley.com
erobbins@sidley.com
nlove@sidley.com
T. Andrew Culbert, Esq.David E. Killough, Esq.Microsoft Corp.
andycu@microsoft.comdavkill@microsoft.com
DATED this 7th day of November, 2012.
/s/Marcia A. RipleyMarcia A. Ripley
Case 2:10-cv-01823-JLR Document 539 Filed 11/07/12 Page 31 of 31
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